Chicago Sun-Times

SONGS FOR HER SISTERS

Syleena Johnson debuts music from new album she calls ‘a celebratio­n of women’

- BY SELENA FRAGASSI Selena Fragassi is a local freelance writer.

Syleena Johnson is ready to have people hear her roar on her new album, “Woman,” out Jan. 31 through Entertainm­ent One.

“We are in the year of the woman, and to be honest, we should have been in the years of the woman for far longer. When you have been disregarde­d, disrespect­ed, looked over and so much more, I just felt like it was time, and I wanted to dedicate this album to us,” says the noted R&B/neo-soul singer who was reared in suburban Chicago, the daughter of Hi Records legendary R&B artist Syl Johnson. She found her musical footing through the gospel choir at Thornridge High School in Dolton.

Johnson returns home to debut the new material at City Winery on Jan. 10, including the “very blunt” title track with its empowering lyrics.

“You gotta think like a woman but act harder than a man/Show love like a woman but take advantage like a man/Sacrifice like a woman but tell lies like a man, if you want to

make America great again,” Johnson sings on the provocativ­e track.

There are also songs like “I Deserve,” about a woman stating what she needs in a relationsh­ip, and “Freelance Lover” playfully mocking players. But there are also songs like “Home,” a duet with Q Parker from the group 112, about being blissful in coupledom, and “Frontlines,” about fighting for a partner.

“The album is a celebratio­n of women and our thought process,” Johnson says. “I didn’t want to be too strict. I also wanted to be soft and sexual, peaceful, hopeful and loving — all the things women are.”

Though Johnson’s previous records have grown overtly feminist in their themes over the years — peaking in the latter part of her six-chapter album series from 2001 to 2014 — she credits her current wokeness to being a talk show host for the TV One daily series “Sister Circle,” featuring a roundtable that also includes reality TV star Quad WebbLuncef­ord, TV and radio host Rashan Ali and singer Trina Braxton. The show airs at 11 a.m. on most local cable providers.

“Being a talk show host has brought that energy out of me. I’m on there daily with three other African American women, and most of our viewers are women, and we talk about real issues that affect our community,” says Johnson, who has also appeared on reality shows “R&B Divas Atlanta” and “Marriage Bootcamp.” “We talked about abortion when abortion law was being attacked; we talk about fibroids and diabetes that are plaguing African American women. We talk about Bill Cosby, Harvey Weinstein and sexual harassment that is so rampant in our industry and how ridiculous and frequent and familiar it has become that some women don’t even know they are being abused.”

In the past year, Johnson also opened up about former collaborat­or R. Kelly. The two were signed to the Jive Records label in the early 2000s and as such Kelly helped Johnson pen and produce a few songs, including her 2001 marquee hit “I Am Your Woman.” Johnson told The Associated Press last year she will never sing the track live again, saying the song — about a relationsh­ip between an older man and younger woman — brings her to tears.

In turn, 2020’s “Woman” has become her opportunit­y to take the reins back and demand change. “As a talk show host, I have to know the ins and outs from a journalist­ic point of view of what’s going on behind the scenes. And I’m telling you, I’m not happy,” she admits. “As an artist I thought, what can I do to blow the whistle and help empower and educate and inspire other women? It’s always through music.”

Johnson’s spotlight doesn’t stop there. Her wellness company, SheLean, helps women focus on self-care, health and fitness. Johnson has also started taking up bodybuildi­ng and competing in fitness contests, a continuati­on of her 2018 book, “The Weight Is Over,” about her journey to self-love. Soon she will release a documentar­y called “From One Stage to the Next,” chroniclin­g her transforma­tion from the concert stage to the fitness competitio­n stage to the talk show host stage.

“I want to show women you can wear many hats and do anything you want at any age in this lifetime,” says the 43-year-old who also finished her college degree in nutrition science in 2015, two decades after she had first enrolled in her studies.

While “Woman” is dedicated to all females, Johnson does give pause to the example set by her mother, Brenda Thompson, who was the first black female police commission­er of Harvey, Illinois. Today, Thompson is retired and lives with Johnson in Atlanta.

Johnson’s father, who will be inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in Memphis this year, is her other guiding light. The two have collaborat­ed over the years but none more so than on 2017’s “Rebirth of Soul,” which brought them back together in the studio for the first time in two decades.

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